News

In many cancer patients who have been treated with immunotherapy, the tumor comes back. New research identifies the cells responsible for thwarting the treatment and offers new insights into how they do it.

by Alexandra MacWade, assistant editor A new $10 million endowment gift made by the Donald A. Pels Charitable Trust will provide ongoing support for the university’s chemical and structural biologists through the Pels Family Center for Biochemistry and Structural Biology. Mr. Pels, who was a Roc...

Rockefeller in the News

The New York Times

Paul Greengard, an American neuroscientist whose quest to understand how brain cells communicate provided new insights into psychological diseases and earned him a Nobel Prize, and who used his entire $400,000 award to create an academic prize in memory of the mother he never knew, died on Saturday in Manhattan. He was 93.

Associated Press

Further study may reveal surprises about what mosquitoes pay attention to, [Leslie] Vosshall said. And that could lead to better lures for mosquito traps, as well as better repellents. Maybe scientists can find something “10,000 times more disgusting” to a mosquito than the old standby, DEET, she said.

Discover Magazine Blogs

Scientists at Rockefeller University claim they’ve pinpointed a protein in the ear that acts as a sort of molecular gatekeeper, helping convert soundwaves into the electrical signals that our brains interpret as sound. The finding, though incremental, helps establish a more detailed understanding of how hearing works.

Seek magazine

Spring 2019

Rockefeller’s flagship publication is interested not just in scientific results, but in the people, ideas, and conversations that ignite discovery. The latest issue looks deep into the brains of small critters and their decision-making processes. Also: how research on rare diseases could benefit us all, and much more.

A meticulous map of the placenta

Facebook

A new study from Rockefeller's Daniel Mucida reveals that gut segments are organized by function. The findings shed light on how the intestine maximizes nutrient uptake, while at the same time protecting the body from potentially dangerous microbes. bit.ly/2Wmakrp... See MoreSee Less

Today is HIV Vaccine Awareness Day. Read about how researchers in the Nussenzweig lab have yielded fresh insight into how an HIV vaccine might ultimately be engineered. #HVAD #SeekMagazine bit.ly/2W0QHot... See MoreSee Less

Twitter

A new study from Rockefeller's @danmucida reveals that gut segments are organized by function. The findings shed light on how the intestine maximizes nutrient uptake, while at the same time protecting the body from potentially dangerous microbes.
https://t.co/1Cuwtb22o5

Rockefeller President Rick Lifton will co-chair the new international commission on the clinical use of heritable genome editing convened by the @theNAMedicine, @theNASciences, and @royalsociety. https://t.co/U82hFY19Rq #GeneEditing

Günter Blobel was born #OTD in 1936. He won a #LaskerAward for pioneering the field of protein translocation and for making key advances in protein sorting and targeting. @RockefellerUniv https://t.co/2tbWJhUY8O

Today is HIV Vaccine Awareness Day. Read about how researchers in the #NussenzweigLab have yielded fresh insight into how an HIV vaccine might ultimately be engineered. #HVAD #SeekMagazine https://t.co/YK3PDsPIwz